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Light Emitting Diodes for Full Color Display and Solid State Lighting

Dr. Biwu MaDepartment of Chemistry and BiochemistryMaterials Science and Engineering Program

Florida State University

Light Emitting Diodes

Photoluminescence (PL Mode)• Activated by light energy• Conversion color from other light sources• Light with shorter wavelength (higher energy)

Electroluminescence (EL Mode)• Activated by electronic energy• Direct emission of colored light• OLEDs, QLEDs, PeLEDs, etc.

Generation of Light in Semiconductor LEDs

Generation of Light in Semiconductor LEDs

Generation of Light in Semiconductor LEDs

Chip Structure of LEDs

Spectra of LEDs

Evolution of LED Light Sources

Evolution of LED Light Sources

Concepts of White LEDs

Optically Pumped WLEDs

Solid State Lighting Display Backlight

Blue (or UV) LED� Phosphors �White

Phosphor-LEDs

Luminescent Materials (Phosphors)

Requirements for Phosphors

Ce3+ Phosphors

Ce: Xe 4f1 5d1 6s2

Ce3+ Phosphors

Yttrium aluminium garnet (YAG, Y3Al5O12) is a synthetic crystalline material of the garnet group.

Ce3+ Phosphors

Optically Pumped White LEDs

Optically Pumped White LEDs

Optically Pumped White LEDs

Problems of Ce3+ Phosphors

The Future of WLEDs

Blue LED + Yellow Phosphor:• Poor color rendering• Circadian rhythms disruption• Suppression of melatonin

An ideal phosphor:• Near-unity PLQE• Good spectral overlapping• Excellent thermal and photo-stability• Great color rendering

Solid State Lighting

Courtesy of Seoul Semiconductor

Electrically Driven Thin Film LEDs

Colloidal Quantum Dots

Phosphorescent Metal Complexes

Perovskite MaterialsOrganic Charge Transport Materials

S

O O

n n

SO3H

AIBN+

60 oC

N

N

N

N

n m

170 oC 2h,

n m

N

N

nm

N

NN

N

n m

200 oC 4h

Crosslinking

Metal Oxides

O

O

HTLAnode (+)

Cathode (-)

ETL

Substrate

Organic Light Emitting Diodes

What is OLEDs?

Viable Candidates for: New generation flat full color displaysSuperior to current LCD displays:•Compact size•Broader viewing angle•Bright saturated colors•Faster response•More power efficiency•Can be flexible and transparent

Illumination sources (white OLEDs)•High power efficiency (2 to 3 times > incandescent lamp)•Generate pleasing white light with high CRI•Enable "designer color" on demand•Provide new design opportunities for architects.

What is OLEDs?

The structure •About 1000Å organic layers sandwiched between 2 electrodes•At least 1 electrode is transparent

Operation principle•Charge carriers injection•Migration•Recombination•Electroluminescence

N N

a-NPD

AlN

O

3

Alq3

Typical HTL: Typical ETL:

+

metal cathode

(-)

(+)

substrate

transparent conductor

~ 1000 Å

Why OLEDs?

•Compact size (as thin as 0.05 mm)•Broader viewing angle (even 90° from normal)•Bright saturated colors •Faster response (1,000 times faster than LCD) •More power efficiency (40%-50% less power consumption)•Can be flexible and transparent (On plastic substrates)

•High power efficiency•Generate pleasing white light with high CRI•Enable "designer color" on demand•Provide new design opportunitiesLig

htin

g Di

spla

y

The First Efficient OLED

Cited16591 times

How OLEDs work?

E=0 Vacuum level

E HOMO

E LUMO

e-

E HOMO

E LUMOh+

E=0 Vacuum level

• LUMO of ETL transport electrons;• HOMO of HTL transport holes.

radical anion

neutral molecule

radical cation

neutral molecule

Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital

Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbital

How OLEDs work?

+

hn

A* → A+ hn

DEHOMO-LUMO ~ hn

exciton A*

The emission color is proportional to the DEHOMO-LUMO of emissive materials (exciton).

Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbital

Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital

Early Development of OLEDs

The First Polymer LEDs

Cited 13681 times

Doped emissive layer (EL).

(+)

(-)

h+

e-

Alq3

HTL

Problem:excitons emit from a dense, pure matrix: significant self-quenching is typical

Efficiency is ~ 1%

Alq3* + Alq3* Alq3 + Alq3*

Doped emissive layer (EL).

(+)

(-)

h+

e-

Alq3

HTL

Problem:excitons emit from a dense, pure matrix: significant self-quenching is typical

Efficiency is ~ 1%

(+)

(-)

h+

e-

Alq3

HTL

dopant

HOSTDOPANT

Doping (0.5-1%) fluorescent dyes in the emissive layer

Efficiency is ~ 2-3 %Alq3* + Alq3* Alq3 + Alq3*

Doped emissive layer (EL).

HOSTDOPANT

Doping (0.5-1%) fluorescent dyes in the emissive layer

Efficiency is ~ 2-3 %

Förster energy transfer

Dexter energy transfer

Advantage:Self-quenching of excitons is prevented.

Tune the color of OLEDs by controlling emission energies of dopants.

(+)

(-)

h+

e-

Alq3

HTL

dopant

Electrophosphorescence

Max theoretical quantum efficiency Fluorescent Phosphorescent

Internal 25% 100%External 5% 20%

Harvested both by

fluorescent and

phosphorescent dyesHeavy metal Ir and Pt

complexes facilitate

intersystem crossing •Experimentally determined singlet fraction for Alq3 based

OLEDs = 22±3% Baldo et.al., Phys. Rev. B ,1999

excitons

N N

N NPt

PtOEP fac-Ir(ppy)3

NIr

3 Harvested only by

phosphorescent

lumophores

S1 ISCT1

fluorescencephosphorescence

S0

S2

The First Phosphorescent OLED

Cited 6450 times

Platinum Complexes

Iridium Complexes

Color Tuning Mechanism

Fabrication of OLEDs

•Three Types:1.Vacuum Deposition/Vacuum Thermal Evaporation(VTE)2.Organic Vapor Phase Deposition3.Inkjet Printing

Vacuum Thermal Evaporation• Ideally in vacuum chamber• Very low pressure (10-6 or 10-5 Torr)• Molecules gently heated until evaporation• Condensed as thin films on a cooled substrate• Thickness of each layer can be precisely controlled• Disadvantages

• Evaporant condensed on cold walls can flake off, contaminating the system and substrate• Very difficult to control uniformity and doping concentration over large areas • Very expensive and inefficient

Organic Vapor Phase Deposition• Process

• Under low-pressure and in a hot-walled reactor chamber• Carrier gas transports evaporated organic molecules onto cooled substrates• Condensed into thin films

• Improves control over doping• Controlled by both temperature and carrier gas flow rate

• Better for large-area substrates• Advantage

• Use of a carrier gas increases the efficiency• Reduces cost

Inkjet Printing• Process

• Organic materials diluted into a liquid and sprayed onto substrates

• Similar to a standard inkjet printer

• Organic Vapor Jet Printing• Developed at Princeton

• Uses vaporized organics instead of the liquid based jets of other inkjet printers

• Current Equipment Manufacturer• MIT spinout Kateeva

• Advantages• Drastically reduces manufacturing costs

• Allows OLEDs to be printed onto very large films

• Examples - 80 inch TV screen or electronic billboard

AMOLED

iPhone X Diamond Sub-Pixels

Electrically Driven Quantum Dot LEDs

Cited by 2798

Quantum Dot LEDs

Perovskite LEDs

Metal Halide Perovskites

ABX3A = Cs, CH3NH3B = Pb, Sn, etc.X = Cl, Br, I

Attractive Features:

§ Earth abundant elements

§ Solution processable

§ Low temperature processing

§ Excellent optical properties

§ Excellent electronic properties

§ High structure tunablity

The First Report of Efficient Perovskite LEDs at R.T.

Cited by 1654

The State of The Art

Outlooks and Challenges

• Efficiency (Approaching that of OLEDs)?• Full color display and solid state lighting (Color tuning)?• Stability (Material and device degradations)?• Cost-effectiveness (Material and processing costs)?• Environmental concerns (Lead free)?